CERTAIN DETAINEES FROM GUANTANAMO
CLASSIFIED BY S/WCI - AMBASSADOR PIERRE-RICHARD
PROSPER FOR REASONS 1.4(B) AND (D)
1. (U) This is an action request; please see
paragraphs 5 - 6.
2. (C) Background. There are 22 Chinese
nationals of Uighur ethnicity under USG control
at Guantanamo. DoD has determined that 15 of the
22 are no longer of intelligence/law enforcement
value, and have been approved for release. As a
matter of U.S. law they are not eligible for
entry into the United States. To facilitate
resettlement, the United States has approached
several countries with Uighur communities and
other countries with linguistically or culturally
similar populations. We have yet to find a
country willing to accept the Uighur detainees.
We will not send Uighurs to countries that are
unable or unwilling to resist possible Chinese
pressures to return the Uighurs to the Peoples
Republic of China ("PRC" or "China").
3. (C) Background continued. There is reason to
be concerned for the detainees' fate if returned
to China. All 15 detainees have stated that they
do not wish to return to China expressing fears
for their safety, including possibly persecution
or torture. As a matter of policy, the USG does
not return or transfer detainees to countries
where the U.S. believes it is "more likely than
not" that they will be tortured or that the
person has a well-founded fear of persecution
warranting protection. Pursuant to a request
from DoD, DHS conducted interviews of these
detainees to assess their protection needs and
concluded that they cannot be returned to the PRC
consistent with USG policy. The Deputies
Committee, convened on September 13, asked the
Department to broaden its efforts to locate
countries willing to accept some of the Uighurs,
and to identify possible deliverables for
particular countries that could be used to
leverage assistance and facilitate their
resettlement. End Background.
4. (U) Litigation Update. Habeas cases are
pending on behalf of 13 Uighurs, including at
least 3 that have been determined to no longer to
be enemy combatants (NLECs). The presiding judge
in two of these cases, Judge Robertson, has under
advisement a motion to bring two petitioners to
Washington for a hearing or for interim release,
and to supervise petitioners' living conditions
at Guantanamo.
5. (C) Action Request. Resettling the Uighurs is
a high-priority issue for the USG and continues
to be of high-level interest for the Department,
interagency counterparts, and the White House.
Action addressee posts are requested to approach
host governments at the highest level to request
assistance with the resettlement of these Chinese
nationals drawing from the talking points below.
Posts are also requested to provide the
Department with a front channel assessment
regarding host government response to demarche
and recommendation on next diplomatic steps, if
necessary. Info posts will be provided separate
instructions and more precise/focused talking
points to use when requesting assistance from
host government officials. Department requests
info posts also provide front channel assessments
of host government views and recommended
diplomatic steps. Department is prepared to
follow-up with high-level phone calls to host
government counterparts, should those be deemed
necessary.
6. (C) Action Request. When approaching host
government officials, posts are also requested to
consider incentives and/or other innovative ways
to influence a positive response from a
particular country to assist with resettlement.
The Deputy Secretary instructs bureaus to be
creative and explore ways to leverage prior
support provided by the USG to a country as a
means of facilitating some form of third country
resettlement assistance.
Talking Points:
-- The USG has in detention at Guantanamo 15
Uighurs men of Chinese nationality who have been
approved for release; we have determined that
these individuals will not be prosecuted by the
United States;
-- 5 of these 15 have been determined to no
longer meet the criteria as enemy combatants by a
Combatant Status Review Tribunal and should
therefore be released as soon as possible;
-- We ask for your assistance on this
humanitarian problem as the need becomes
increasingly pressing with the passage of time;
-- It has been two years since some of these
Uighurs were first approved for release and we
need to find a home for these individuals;
-- Each of the Uighurs has stated that he does
not want to return to China due to fear of
potential persecution or torture; they do not/not
want to return to China upon their release;
-- Based on individual interviews to assess their
fears, we believe their fears of torture are
credible and warrant protection and resettlement
in a third country; the U.S. will not repatriate
them to the PRC, consistent with USG policy;
-- It has also been determined that these
individuals are ineligible for protection as
refugees under U.S. law;
-- We request that your government consider the
possible resettlement of some of these
individuals in your country; we are approaching a
number of other governments simultaneously;
-- (if applicable to Post) We understand there
may be Uighur or Muslim communities in your
country that could offer the kind of support
network that would facilitate integration into
society;
-- We would be prepared to share specific
information on each individual as necessary to
assist with your evaluation (supplementing info
provided in paragraph 7), including the
opportunity for the appropriate authorities from
your government to visit Guantanamo and interview
them yourselves before agreeing to accept them;
-- Many of the Uighurs have not claimed to be
members of any formalized Uighur group; to date,
the State Department has not listed any Uighur
separatist group on its list of Foreign Terrorist
Organizations; [Note: however, ETIM has been
placed on the separate Terrorist Exclusion List
(TEL).]
-- All detainees are male, late 20s-early 30s,
most with low education, some first went to
Afghanistan/Pakistan for economic opportunity,
others to learn to fight PRC authority in
Xinjiang.
-- While we have confidence that your government
would not return these individuals to the PRC
consistent with relevant international
obligations, we would require credible assurances
that Uighurs released in your country would not
be returned to the PRC against their will and
also would require assurances that you would
treat these individuals humanely in accordance
with both your domestic and international
obligations;
-- For the safety of the detainees, we ask that
you keep our consultations and your deliberations
- confidential.
If Asked:
-- What about USG resettlement? The U.S.
Government has carefully considered their
resettlement in the United States. Due to the
individual's backgrounds, provisions of the U.S.
Immigration and Nationality Act impose barriers
to bringing them to the United States, even
though they have now been determined to be
releasable.
-- What about ICRC or UNHCR assistance? We have
been in and are continuing discussions with both
organizations.
-- Why not seek resettlement in countries where
there are greater cultural or linguistic
similarities? Our options are limited. The
countries we approached that have Uighur
populations have so far been unwilling to accept
them. Also, we would not release the Uighurs to
a country unwilling or unable to resist Chinese
pressures to return them to China.
-- What threat do these 15 individuals pose to
the U.S. or international community security
interests? All 15 of these Uighurs have been
approved for release by the U.S.; 5 of the 15
were reviewed by a Combatant Status Review Board
at Guantanamo and determined to not be enemy
combatants and should be released as soon as
possible. These Uighurs have repeatedly
indicated in their interviews at Guantanamo that
they attended training camps in Afghanistan to
fight the Chinese, not the United States.
End Talking Points
7. (S) Biographical Information on Detainees:
General background such as age, marital status,
work background, and language skills, is
releasable to host government if post believes
such information would help persuade authorities
to accept the individual for resettlement.
Name: Abd al-Samad Abd al-Ahad
ISN: US9CH-000295DP
Date of Birth: 1977.
Place of Birth: Konashahar, China.
Home: Konashahar.
Next of Kin: Ahat, Abdul (father); Tahir, Hadicha
(mother).
Circumstances of Capture: December 2001 in
Pakistan.
Background: From 1984 to 1989 detainee went to
primary schools in general studies. Detainee
worked at his family farm until he left in June
2001. Detainee went to Afghanistan because he
wanted to go to a country where there was
democracy. Detainee is not married and does not
have any children. Detainee speaks Uighur, Uzbek
and Mandarin.
Name: Muhammad Qadir
ISN: US9CH-000293DP
Date of Birth: 11 October 1974.
Place of Birth: Ghulja, Xinjiang Province, China.
Home: Ghulja.
Next of Kin: Awut, Abdul Hakem (father); Arzigul
(mother).
Circumstances of Capture: Arrested 16 December
2001 in Pakistan.
Background: Attended a Uighur/ Eastern Turkistan
Uigher Movement (ETIM) training camp near
Jalalabad, Afghanistan. Detainee attended school
through the 8th grade. After his schooling the
detainee worked at the Tashlapki Bazaar, selling
clothing until 1997, when he was 23 years old.
In 1997 he rented a store from Yenji Hayat
Wholesale Store in Ghulja and worked in sales.
Detainee was a clothing merchant in Kyrgyzstan
for about a year. Detainee claims he departed
China due to problems finding work.
Name: Khaled Ali
ISN: US9CH-000280DP
Date of Birth: 27 July 1977.
Place of Birth: Ghulja, Xinjiang, China.
Home: Ghulja.
Next of Kin: Amin, Ali (father); Zulat, Hamut
(mother)
Circumstances of Capture: captured on 1 December
2001 in Qabayilar, Pakistan.
Background: Detainee was self-employed in Ghulja
selling clothes. He also claims to have worked as
a furniture maker, jewelry maker and a merchant.
He has 8 years of education. He traveled from
China to Kyrgyzstan to Afghanistan using a legal
business passport. He says he traveled to
Afghanistan to study the Koran.
Name: Adil Ahmad
ISN: US9CH-000260DP
Date of Birth: 1973.
Place of Birth: Kashgar, China.
Home: Shinjun,Turkzach, China.
Next of Kin: Adel (no further info).
Circumstances of Capture: Captured 16 December
2001 in Pakistan.
Background: Attended school for 6 years. He
claims that he went to Afghanistan to search for
work in a Uighur community/improve his family's
financial condition, and to escape the
persecution from the Chinese government. Detainee
speaks Mandarin, Uzbek and Russian.
Name: Ali Mohammed
ISN: US9CH-000250DP
Date of Birth: 1974.
Place of Birth: Ghulja, China.
Home: Ghulja, China.
Next of Kin: Nurniza (mother); Muhammed (father).
Circumstances of Capture: Arrested in December
2001 after fleeing into Pakistan from Afghanistan
Background: Claims he went to Afghanistan to
escape the persecution from the Chinese
government, in search of a better life. Detainee
has 5 years of formal education. From 1992 to
1997, detainee sold clothing to tourists. From
1997 until 2000, detainee drove tourists to the
bazaar. He is single with no children. Detainee
speaks Uighur, Mandarin, Russian, Uzbeki.
Name: Hozaifa Farhat
ISN: US9CH-000320DP
Date of Birth: 11 February 1971.
Place of Birth: Ghulja China.
Home: Ghulja.
Next of Kin: Parat, Muzayfa (father); Tokhdi
(mother).
Circumstances of Capture: captured with a group
of approximately 35 Uighurs.
Background: Detainee attended grades one through
six at the 22nd Elementary School in the Karadum
section of Ghulja, China. Detainee finished his
education at the 14th High School in Karadum,
Ghulja. Detainee claims that he was a refugee
freedom fighter from Gulja, China and fled China
to fight Chinese oppression of ethnic Uighurs.
Name: Sabit Khan Yassin
ISN: US9CH-000289DP
Date of Birth: 7 November 1974.
Place of Birth: Ghulja, China.
Circumstances of Capture: captured in Parachinar,
Pakistan in December 2001 while crossing from,
Afghanistan.
Home: Ghulja.
Background: In September 1998 detainee left
Ghulga, China and traveled to Bishkek,
Kygykistan. In November 2000 detainee went to a
Uighur/ETIM camp to learn how to use weapons so
that he could fight against the PRC.
Name: Yaqub Ahmed Mohammed
ISN: US9CH-000328DP
Date of Birth: 18 June 1979.
Place of Birth: Xinjiang, China.
Home: China.
Next of Kin: Abdul Hadir (father); Tunisahan
(mother)
Circumstances of Capture: after fleeing the US
bombing, was captured in Pakistan without
incident.
Background: Detainee is a 25-year-old Chinese
citizen who fled China in 2000. Detainee joined a
Uighur separatist movement in an effort to return
to China and fight for an Islamic Uighur
homeland.
Name: Abu Bakr Qasim
ISN: US9CH-000283DP
Date of Birth: 13 May 1969.
Place of Birth: Ghulja, China.
Home: Ghulja.
Next of Kin: Abu Bakr Quasim (father); Rasalet
(mother)
Date/Place of Capture: the border of Pakistan.
Background: Detainee is a Chinese Uigher who left
Ghulja, Xinjaing Province, China in an attempt to
travel to Iran and on to Turkey for the purpose
of working in the factory of a former employer.
Soon after detainee arrived in Bishkek,
Kyrgizstan Detainee traveled to Pakistan, and
made arrangements to get to the Tora Bora
Mountain camp in Afghanistan.
Name: Abd Al Ghatar Abd al-Rahman,
ISN: US9CH-000281DP
Date of Birth: 15 March 1973.
Place of Birth: Kucha, China.
Home: Kucha.
Next of Kin: Abdul Rahman Mahmut (father);
Hepizam (mother)
Circumstances of Capture: captured in Qabiyalar,
Pakistan in January 2002.
Background: Detainee was a wheat farmer and was
self-employed as a shoe salesman in China prior
to leaving for Afghanistan. Claims he traveled to
Afghanistan to study the Koran and receive
training in order to support the Uighur movement
against China.
Name: Akhadar Qasem Basit
ISN: US9CH-000276DP
Date of Birth: 1973.
Place of Birth: Ghulja, Xinjiang Province, China.
Home: not available.
Next of Kin: Basit, Qasim (father).
Circumstances of Capture: Arrested 16 December
2001 in Pakistan.
Background: Supported himself in China by selling
fruit and other goods at Uighur market. Recently
uncooperative. Feels betrayed by the U.S.
following a visit to Guantanamo by a delegation
of Chinese officials. Believes that China now
considers him to be a criminal. Spent about 2
months in the Uighur training camp in
Afghanistan. He claims he only wanted to learn
how to fight against Chinese oppression.
Detainee also claims he was not fighting for al-
Qaida or the Taliban and had never heard of ETIM.
Name: Najmedeen Mohammed
ISN: US9CH-000102DP
Date of Birth: 4 May 1975.
Place of Birth: Khulga, China.
Home: Khulga.
Next of Kin: data not available.
Circumstances of Capture: 30 November 2001 near
Mazar-e-Sharif with 18 others. Went to
Afghanistan to escape the persecution from the
Chinese government.
Background: Worked as a goldsmith. Detainee
left China joined a Uighur separatist movement
due to injustice -- friends and relatives
suffered beatings and death for demonstrating
against China. Claims he wanted to fight for an
Islamic Uighur homeland but now wants to live a
peaceful life.
Name: Ayoob Haji Mohammed
ISN: US9CH-000279DP
Date of Birth: 1984.
Place of Birth: Kashgar, China.
Home: Kashgar.
Next of Kin: Mijit, Haji Mohammed (father);
Humara (mother).
Circumstances of Capture: Arrested 16 December
2001 in Pakistan after crossing border with a
group of Arabs.
Background: Detainee has 11 years of education.
Detainee is an ethnic Uighur. He worked selling
clothing in the Quashqar province for about one
year. He left the PRC in July of 2001. Detainee
went to Oxsu, Turkistan where he continued to
sell clothing. Detainee briefly lived at a Uighur
training camp in Tora Bora Mountains of
Afghanistan for about two months.
Name: Hajiakbar Abdul Ghupur,
ISN: US9CH-000282DP
Date of Birth: 1 January 1974.
Place of Birth: Xin Jiang, China.
Home: Xin Jiang.
Next of Kin: Abdulghupur Goraway (father);
Sadatbuwum Mohammed (mother).
Circumstances of Capture: 15 December 2001, in
Qabiyalar, Pakistan.
Background: Detainee was formally schooled (1981-
89), then became a hat maker/tailor and was a
merchant/vendor from 1998-2001. He speaks Uighur
and Uzbek. Detainee left China in May 2001 and
went to Kyrgyzstan for a better life. Finding
Kyrgystan no better than the PRC, he went to
Pakistan with a passport and ID. In Pindi,
Pakistan he met a person who directed him to a
Uighur/ETIM training camp in Afghanistan.
Name: Abd al-Sabr Abd al-Hamid Uthman
ISN: US9CH-000275DP
Date of Birth: 9 November 1975.
Place of Birth: Aksu, China.
Home: China.
Next of Kin: data not available.
Circumstances of Capture: captured 16 December
2001 as he crossed the Pakistani border.
Background: Detainee was a farmer and raised
sheep in the PRC. He has 5 years of education;
spent 1 year studying the Koran. PRC officials
suspected detainee was a separatist sympathizer
and they arrested him in 1996. Detainee left the
PRC in 2001 after being imprisoned twice, and
traveled to Jalalabad Afghanistan via Kyrgyzistan
and Pakistan. Detainee went to a Uighur/ETIM
training camp in Afghanistan, where he trained on
infantry weapons with other Uighurs at the camp.
RICE
NNNN

Raw content

S E C R E T STATE 183800
SIPDIS
E.O. 12958: DECL: 10/03/10
TAGS: MOPS, PREL, PTER, KAWC, PHUM, PREF, PINR
SUBJECT: REQUEST FOR RESETTLEMENT ASSISTANCE OF
CERTAIN DETAINEES FROM GUANTANAMO
CLASSIFIED BY S/WCI - AMBASSADOR PIERRE-RICHARD
PROSPER FOR REASONS 1.4(B) AND (D)
1. (U) This is an action request; please see
paragraphs 5 - 6.
2. (C) Background. There are 22 Chinese
nationals of Uighur ethnicity under USG control
at Guantanamo. DoD has determined that 15 of the
22 are no longer of intelligence/law enforcement
value, and have been approved for release. As a
matter of U.S. law they are not eligible for
entry into the United States. To facilitate
resettlement, the United States has approached
several countries with Uighur communities and
other countries with linguistically or culturally
similar populations. We have yet to find a
country willing to accept the Uighur detainees.
We will not send Uighurs to countries that are
unable or unwilling to resist possible Chinese
pressures to return the Uighurs to the Peoples
Republic of China ("PRC" or "China").
3. (C) Background continued. There is reason to
be concerned for the detainees' fate if returned
to China. All 15 detainees have stated that they
do not wish to return to China expressing fears
for their safety, including possibly persecution
or torture. As a matter of policy, the USG does
not return or transfer detainees to countries
where the U.S. believes it is "more likely than
not" that they will be tortured or that the
person has a well-founded fear of persecution
warranting protection. Pursuant to a request
from DoD, DHS conducted interviews of these
detainees to assess their protection needs and
concluded that they cannot be returned to the PRC
consistent with USG policy. The Deputies
Committee, convened on September 13, asked the
Department to broaden its efforts to locate
countries willing to accept some of the Uighurs,
and to identify possible deliverables for
particular countries that could be used to
leverage assistance and facilitate their
resettlement. End Background.
4. (U) Litigation Update. Habeas cases are
pending on behalf of 13 Uighurs, including at
least 3 that have been determined to no longer to
be enemy combatants (NLECs). The presiding judge
in two of these cases, Judge Robertson, has under
advisement a motion to bring two petitioners to
Washington for a hearing or for interim release,
and to supervise petitioners' living conditions
at Guantanamo.
5. (C) Action Request. Resettling the Uighurs is
a high-priority issue for the USG and continues
to be of high-level interest for the Department,
interagency counterparts, and the White House.
Action addressee posts are requested to approach
host governments at the highest level to request
assistance with the resettlement of these Chinese
nationals drawing from the talking points below.
Posts are also requested to provide the
Department with a front channel assessment
regarding host government response to demarche
and recommendation on next diplomatic steps, if
necessary. Info posts will be provided separate
instructions and more precise/focused talking
points to use when requesting assistance from
host government officials. Department requests
info posts also provide front channel assessments
of host government views and recommended
diplomatic steps. Department is prepared to
follow-up with high-level phone calls to host
government counterparts, should those be deemed
necessary.
6. (C) Action Request. When approaching host
government officials, posts are also requested to
consider incentives and/or other innovative ways
to influence a positive response from a
particular country to assist with resettlement.
The Deputy Secretary instructs bureaus to be
creative and explore ways to leverage prior
support provided by the USG to a country as a
means of facilitating some form of third country
resettlement assistance.
Talking Points:
-- The USG has in detention at Guantanamo 15
Uighurs men of Chinese nationality who have been
approved for release; we have determined that
these individuals will not be prosecuted by the
United States;
-- 5 of these 15 have been determined to no
longer meet the criteria as enemy combatants by a
Combatant Status Review Tribunal and should
therefore be released as soon as possible;
-- We ask for your assistance on this
humanitarian problem as the need becomes
increasingly pressing with the passage of time;
-- It has been two years since some of these
Uighurs were first approved for release and we
need to find a home for these individuals;
-- Each of the Uighurs has stated that he does
not want to return to China due to fear of
potential persecution or torture; they do not/not
want to return to China upon their release;
-- Based on individual interviews to assess their
fears, we believe their fears of torture are
credible and warrant protection and resettlement
in a third country; the U.S. will not repatriate
them to the PRC, consistent with USG policy;
-- It has also been determined that these
individuals are ineligible for protection as
refugees under U.S. law;
-- We request that your government consider the
possible resettlement of some of these
individuals in your country; we are approaching a
number of other governments simultaneously;
-- (if applicable to Post) We understand there
may be Uighur or Muslim communities in your
country that could offer the kind of support
network that would facilitate integration into
society;
-- We would be prepared to share specific
information on each individual as necessary to
assist with your evaluation (supplementing info
provided in paragraph 7), including the
opportunity for the appropriate authorities from
your government to visit Guantanamo and interview
them yourselves before agreeing to accept them;
-- Many of the Uighurs have not claimed to be
members of any formalized Uighur group; to date,
the State Department has not listed any Uighur
separatist group on its list of Foreign Terrorist
Organizations; [Note: however, ETIM has been
placed on the separate Terrorist Exclusion List
(TEL).]
-- All detainees are male, late 20s-early 30s,
most with low education, some first went to
Afghanistan/Pakistan for economic opportunity,
others to learn to fight PRC authority in
Xinjiang.
-- While we have confidence that your government
would not return these individuals to the PRC
consistent with relevant international
obligations, we would require credible assurances
that Uighurs released in your country would not
be returned to the PRC against their will and
also would require assurances that you would
treat these individuals humanely in accordance
with both your domestic and international
obligations;
-- For the safety of the detainees, we ask that
you keep our consultations and your deliberations
- confidential.
If Asked:
-- What about USG resettlement? The U.S.
Government has carefully considered their
resettlement in the United States. Due to the
individual's backgrounds, provisions of the U.S.
Immigration and Nationality Act impose barriers
to bringing them to the United States, even
though they have now been determined to be
releasable.
-- What about ICRC or UNHCR assistance? We have
been in and are continuing discussions with both
organizations.
-- Why not seek resettlement in countries where
there are greater cultural or linguistic
similarities? Our options are limited. The
countries we approached that have Uighur
populations have so far been unwilling to accept
them. Also, we would not release the Uighurs to
a country unwilling or unable to resist Chinese
pressures to return them to China.
-- What threat do these 15 individuals pose to
the U.S. or international community security
interests? All 15 of these Uighurs have been
approved for release by the U.S.; 5 of the 15
were reviewed by a Combatant Status Review Board
at Guantanamo and determined to not be enemy
combatants and should be released as soon as
possible. These Uighurs have repeatedly
indicated in their interviews at Guantanamo that
they attended training camps in Afghanistan to
fight the Chinese, not the United States.
End Talking Points
7. (S) Biographical Information on Detainees:
General background such as age, marital status,
work background, and language skills, is
releasable to host government if post believes
such information would help persuade authorities
to accept the individual for resettlement.
Name: Abd al-Samad Abd al-Ahad
ISN: US9CH-000295DP
Date of Birth: 1977.
Place of Birth: Konashahar, China.
Home: Konashahar.
Next of Kin: Ahat, Abdul (father); Tahir, Hadicha
(mother).
Circumstances of Capture: December 2001 in
Pakistan.
Background: From 1984 to 1989 detainee went to
primary schools in general studies. Detainee
worked at his family farm until he left in June
2001. Detainee went to Afghanistan because he
wanted to go to a country where there was
democracy. Detainee is not married and does not
have any children. Detainee speaks Uighur, Uzbek
and Mandarin.
Name: Muhammad Qadir
ISN: US9CH-000293DP
Date of Birth: 11 October 1974.
Place of Birth: Ghulja, Xinjiang Province, China.
Home: Ghulja.
Next of Kin: Awut, Abdul Hakem (father); Arzigul
(mother).
Circumstances of Capture: Arrested 16 December
2001 in Pakistan.
Background: Attended a Uighur/ Eastern Turkistan
Uigher Movement (ETIM) training camp near
Jalalabad, Afghanistan. Detainee attended school
through the 8th grade. After his schooling the
detainee worked at the Tashlapki Bazaar, selling
clothing until 1997, when he was 23 years old.
In 1997 he rented a store from Yenji Hayat
Wholesale Store in Ghulja and worked in sales.
Detainee was a clothing merchant in Kyrgyzstan
for about a year. Detainee claims he departed
China due to problems finding work.
Name: Khaled Ali
ISN: US9CH-000280DP
Date of Birth: 27 July 1977.
Place of Birth: Ghulja, Xinjiang, China.
Home: Ghulja.
Next of Kin: Amin, Ali (father); Zulat, Hamut
(mother)
Circumstances of Capture: captured on 1 December
2001 in Qabayilar, Pakistan.
Background: Detainee was self-employed in Ghulja
selling clothes. He also claims to have worked as
a furniture maker, jewelry maker and a merchant.
He has 8 years of education. He traveled from
China to Kyrgyzstan to Afghanistan using a legal
business passport. He says he traveled to
Afghanistan to study the Koran.
Name: Adil Ahmad
ISN: US9CH-000260DP
Date of Birth: 1973.
Place of Birth: Kashgar, China.
Home: Shinjun,Turkzach, China.
Next of Kin: Adel (no further info).
Circumstances of Capture: Captured 16 December
2001 in Pakistan.
Background: Attended school for 6 years. He
claims that he went to Afghanistan to search for
work in a Uighur community/improve his family's
financial condition, and to escape the
persecution from the Chinese government. Detainee
speaks Mandarin, Uzbek and Russian.
Name: Ali Mohammed
ISN: US9CH-000250DP
Date of Birth: 1974.
Place of Birth: Ghulja, China.
Home: Ghulja, China.
Next of Kin: Nurniza (mother); Muhammed (father).
Circumstances of Capture: Arrested in December
2001 after fleeing into Pakistan from Afghanistan
Background: Claims he went to Afghanistan to
escape the persecution from the Chinese
government, in search of a better life. Detainee
has 5 years of formal education. From 1992 to
1997, detainee sold clothing to tourists. From
1997 until 2000, detainee drove tourists to the
bazaar. He is single with no children. Detainee
speaks Uighur, Mandarin, Russian, Uzbeki.
Name: Hozaifa Farhat
ISN: US9CH-000320DP
Date of Birth: 11 February 1971.
Place of Birth: Ghulja China.
Home: Ghulja.
Next of Kin: Parat, Muzayfa (father); Tokhdi
(mother).
Circumstances of Capture: captured with a group
of approximately 35 Uighurs.
Background: Detainee attended grades one through
six at the 22nd Elementary School in the Karadum
section of Ghulja, China. Detainee finished his
education at the 14th High School in Karadum,
Ghulja. Detainee claims that he was a refugee
freedom fighter from Gulja, China and fled China
to fight Chinese oppression of ethnic Uighurs.
Name: Sabit Khan Yassin
ISN: US9CH-000289DP
Date of Birth: 7 November 1974.
Place of Birth: Ghulja, China.
Circumstances of Capture: captured in Parachinar,
Pakistan in December 2001 while crossing from,
Afghanistan.
Home: Ghulja.
Background: In September 1998 detainee left
Ghulga, China and traveled to Bishkek,
Kygykistan. In November 2000 detainee went to a
Uighur/ETIM camp to learn how to use weapons so
that he could fight against the PRC.
Name: Yaqub Ahmed Mohammed
ISN: US9CH-000328DP
Date of Birth: 18 June 1979.
Place of Birth: Xinjiang, China.
Home: China.
Next of Kin: Abdul Hadir (father); Tunisahan
(mother)
Circumstances of Capture: after fleeing the US
bombing, was captured in Pakistan without
incident.
Background: Detainee is a 25-year-old Chinese
citizen who fled China in 2000. Detainee joined a
Uighur separatist movement in an effort to return
to China and fight for an Islamic Uighur
homeland.
Name: Abu Bakr Qasim
ISN: US9CH-000283DP
Date of Birth: 13 May 1969.
Place of Birth: Ghulja, China.
Home: Ghulja.
Next of Kin: Abu Bakr Quasim (father); Rasalet
(mother)
Date/Place of Capture: the border of Pakistan.
Background: Detainee is a Chinese Uigher who left
Ghulja, Xinjaing Province, China in an attempt to
travel to Iran and on to Turkey for the purpose
of working in the factory of a former employer.
Soon after detainee arrived in Bishkek,
Kyrgizstan Detainee traveled to Pakistan, and
made arrangements to get to the Tora Bora
Mountain camp in Afghanistan.
Name: Abd Al Ghatar Abd al-Rahman,
ISN: US9CH-000281DP
Date of Birth: 15 March 1973.
Place of Birth: Kucha, China.
Home: Kucha.
Next of Kin: Abdul Rahman Mahmut (father);
Hepizam (mother)
Circumstances of Capture: captured in Qabiyalar,
Pakistan in January 2002.
Background: Detainee was a wheat farmer and was
self-employed as a shoe salesman in China prior
to leaving for Afghanistan. Claims he traveled to
Afghanistan to study the Koran and receive
training in order to support the Uighur movement
against China.
Name: Akhadar Qasem Basit
ISN: US9CH-000276DP
Date of Birth: 1973.
Place of Birth: Ghulja, Xinjiang Province, China.
Home: not available.
Next of Kin: Basit, Qasim (father).
Circumstances of Capture: Arrested 16 December
2001 in Pakistan.
Background: Supported himself in China by selling
fruit and other goods at Uighur market. Recently
uncooperative. Feels betrayed by the U.S.
following a visit to Guantanamo by a delegation
of Chinese officials. Believes that China now
considers him to be a criminal. Spent about 2
months in the Uighur training camp in
Afghanistan. He claims he only wanted to learn
how to fight against Chinese oppression.
Detainee also claims he was not fighting for al-
Qaida or the Taliban and had never heard of ETIM.
Name: Najmedeen Mohammed
ISN: US9CH-000102DP
Date of Birth: 4 May 1975.
Place of Birth: Khulga, China.
Home: Khulga.
Next of Kin: data not available.
Circumstances of Capture: 30 November 2001 near
Mazar-e-Sharif with 18 others. Went to
Afghanistan to escape the persecution from the
Chinese government.
Background: Worked as a goldsmith. Detainee
left China joined a Uighur separatist movement
due to injustice -- friends and relatives
suffered beatings and death for demonstrating
against China. Claims he wanted to fight for an
Islamic Uighur homeland but now wants to live a
peaceful life.
Name: Ayoob Haji Mohammed
ISN: US9CH-000279DP
Date of Birth: 1984.
Place of Birth: Kashgar, China.
Home: Kashgar.
Next of Kin: Mijit, Haji Mohammed (father);
Humara (mother).
Circumstances of Capture: Arrested 16 December
2001 in Pakistan after crossing border with a
group of Arabs.
Background: Detainee has 11 years of education.
Detainee is an ethnic Uighur. He worked selling
clothing in the Quashqar province for about one
year. He left the PRC in July of 2001. Detainee
went to Oxsu, Turkistan where he continued to
sell clothing. Detainee briefly lived at a Uighur
training camp in Tora Bora Mountains of
Afghanistan for about two months.
Name: Hajiakbar Abdul Ghupur,
ISN: US9CH-000282DP
Date of Birth: 1 January 1974.
Place of Birth: Xin Jiang, China.
Home: Xin Jiang.
Next of Kin: Abdulghupur Goraway (father);
Sadatbuwum Mohammed (mother).
Circumstances of Capture: 15 December 2001, in
Qabiyalar, Pakistan.
Background: Detainee was formally schooled (1981-
89), then became a hat maker/tailor and was a
merchant/vendor from 1998-2001. He speaks Uighur
and Uzbek. Detainee left China in May 2001 and
went to Kyrgyzstan for a better life. Finding
Kyrgystan no better than the PRC, he went to
Pakistan with a passport and ID. In Pindi,
Pakistan he met a person who directed him to a
Uighur/ETIM training camp in Afghanistan.
Name: Abd al-Sabr Abd al-Hamid Uthman
ISN: US9CH-000275DP
Date of Birth: 9 November 1975.
Place of Birth: Aksu, China.
Home: China.
Next of Kin: data not available.
Circumstances of Capture: captured 16 December
2001 as he crossed the Pakistani border.
Background: Detainee was a farmer and raised
sheep in the PRC. He has 5 years of education;
spent 1 year studying the Koran. PRC officials
suspected detainee was a separatist sympathizer
and they arrested him in 1996. Detainee left the
PRC in 2001 after being imprisoned twice, and
traveled to Jalalabad Afghanistan via Kyrgyzistan
and Pakistan. Detainee went to a Uighur/ETIM
training camp in Afghanistan, where he trained on
infantry weapons with other Uighurs at the camp.
RICE
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